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Intellctual
rumble over Igbo origin
By Mazi Ebuzeme
Wednessday, December
2, 2009
One Dr. Charles Ujah granted an interview on 19th August
2009 to the sun newspaper making claims on Ibo Jewish origin
and that the Yoruba was founded by the Ibo with Oduduwa as
Oduduwa (meaning last born in Ibo) e.t.c. His claims are based
on the bible and probably linguistic and cultural similarities.
In a rejoinder of September 18th , 2009 published by the sun
newspaper, one Dr. P.J Eze challenged and dismissed Dr. Ujah’s
Claims as false and unintellectual.
He even called it ‘Red Herring’, but I call it
Ujah’s postulation for the purpose of this exercise.
However I attribute their intellectual face off to the philosophy
of a late highlife maestro Rex Jim Lawson.
Hear his lyrics ‘Am Green turtle, me clever turtle,
for clever turtle, me no get equal. For wisdom me sabi pass
all animal, for clever, me clever pass everyone; for cunning
turtle, that same green turtle, for green turtle me no hate
anyone’. So this is Dr. Ujah’s red bearing and
Dr. Eze’s green turtle. I thank both of them for their
thought and efforts in teaching us new things. It is noteworthy
to appreciate Dr. Eze’s intellectual set up over what
he called a fiction from Dr. Ujah’s postulation on the
Igbo race.
The Claim that Oduduwa means Odudunwa is not realistic especially
to the Yorubas. It is euphemistic to think so just like the
myth surrounding several other origins of nations. The false
start in Dr. Eze’s rejoinder is his prognosis without
complete diagnosis.
History: In his book” The Origin of Ibos”, Dr.
Ujah mentioned historical traces which he equally obtained
from different other writers and religious book. The book
“sight on the scripture – a watch Tower research
publication has some section on the origin of nations and
I recommend that to Dr. Eze. There are several other postulants
and references of the historical traces of Ibo’s having
Jewish or Canaanite antecedents. One of such books is the
Sephardic revolution by Yitzak David Israel, a Sephardic Jew.
Archaeology: I suggest that Dr. Eze should take a trip to
Aguleri and some other Ibo enclaves and see the artefacts
and other interesting discoveries pointing towards the direction
of Dr. Ujah’s postulation. On September 25th, 2009,
another postulant, Eng. Ayodabo Esuola , another Nigerian
researcher claimed that the earliest Jews were Africans in
his book “Tourism and Hidden Treasures of Nigeria”.
Hope Dr. Eze would read this also before condemnation. In
addition, how would Dr. Eze treat the issue of myth e.g. that
the Ibo progenitor fell from the sky, the way Oduduwa is believed
to have evolved? Corrected or condemned, one cannot erase
the myth in people’s psyche which had come from several
generations. Some archaeological findings are mentioned in
Dr. Ujah’s book.
Ethnography: some of us are yet to see or read about some
physical parameters mentioned at the time of creation, where
colour, ethnicity, morphology, phylogeny. Some people today
believe the theory of the egg before the chicken or that God
first made the female who gave birth to the male. It may not
be regional or place but all in the mind. Ethnographic descriptions
of mankind are regional or geographical, racial and migrational.
See references in “Insight on the scriptures, origins
of Nations.
Comparative linguistics: This is the area of intellectual
interest to this Igbo relevance to Ujah’s postulation
and Eze’s correction and condemnation. Dr. Ujah may
have made some sweeping statements along the line of claim
but those I attribute to some emotional exuberance in his
conviction. May I ask, can anyone intentionally go wrong intellectually
of the knew what is right? Dr. Ujah may not be wrong after
all if he has positive references for his research work. Don’t
be surprised that a lot of Nigerians including linguists get
excited to discover the similarities of Yoruba and Igbo languages
with the Jewish antecedents.
Just recently a book on how Yoruba and Igbo became different
languages was launched. The author Bolaji Aremo was formerly
of Obafemi Awolowo University. There are other writers who
even go beyond Yoruba and Igbo by adding Hausa language similarities
despite its extraneous phylum or family. Similarities in lexicostatistics
both in basic and non basic vocabularies are available. Relevant
statements come alive in unique forms e.g. “ Me nini
ka ce” – Hausa and “ma nini ka iche”
– Igbo meaning what do you think or what is your opinion.
“ci gaba”- Hausa and “si gaba” –
Igbo meaning advance, proceed or progress.
Basically we expect the experts like Dr. Eze to assist us
in this area too. We want to know the way we are or have been
in the area of languages. When non formal linguists come up
with some thought provoking research findings, they are easily
prejudiced. The formal linguists fail to realize according
to Aubrey T De Vera that “prejudice which sees only
what it pleases cannot see what is plain”.
Let us consider some of those words used by Dr. Ujah in his
interview and the corrections cited by Dr. Eze discredited
the word jenisisi in Igbo for Genesis used by Ujah as Hebrew,
the Hebrew for the semantics go to the beginning.
The first book of the Septuagint (Pentateuch) is bereshith,
according to Eze. Genesis is Greek but one may question whether
the word Genesis in Greek or something similar was borrowed
as a language universal from Hebrew or the other way round
with similar semantics. Eze as an anthropological linguist
will have to help us further with the root source.
However jenisisi in Igbo may have been a co-operation by its
phonotactic similarity rather than semantics. Nevertheless,
there were Grecian Jews even among scripture writers who spoke
both Hebrew and Greek hence the possibility of vocabulary
transformation from one tongue to another. Ibo land is not
where God first made man and since there was no spontaneous
generation there, everybody came from somewhere. Remember
that the word Ibo as a name, race and language arguably existed
in ancient time.
If as true, is it not possible that such an express equally
existed? As a name “Ibo” existed because in 219
AD, there were some Babylonian Jews who went to Palestine
to study in the academies under a Jewish Rabbi called Juda
Ha Nasi. One of such Jews was by name Abba Ben Ibo. Ibo was
Abba’s last or family name. For further story one this,
see the research Watch Tower magazine of May 15 1998 under
the caption “what is the Talmud.” So the name
Ibo as a word or person and Igbo as a vernacular is very ancient.
Remember also that Ajayi Crowther who coined the Ibo alphabets
said in 1864 that Ibos are Igbos.
The Hebrew word “Bereshith” is Eze’s correction
agreed, but I recall that Dr. Ujah used the expression “Mbido
ni ishi.” In one of his details but then Eze has not
read the book to see this. However the word Bereshith has
no cognate with the Igbo language but can be pronounced as
“Mbido ni ishi” when one stammers.
When speaking with difficulty, repeating sounds and syllables
and making frequent pauses it can phonotactically broker.
A curious syllogism can be language existed before 219AD as
testified by the antecedents of Abba Ben Ibo mentioned earlier.
Dr. Eze chronicled the Septuagint to be between 250 to 100BC.
So these events were close in time. Do not forget that the
new testament of the Bible was written long time after Jesus’
had left the earth. The word Ibo existed even before the compilation
of the book.
Another cited by Eze as dissimilar is the Hebrew for eye as
“ain” and the Igbo anya/enya. He was emphatic
on the palatal nasal [NY] in Ujah’s explanation of Hebrew
with anya in Igbo. Many see no wrong in that if the semantics
are similar. After all the palatal nasal [NY] is a way of
speech developed overtime. In the U.S New York natives- not
immigrants pronounce the city as “Nyew Yorq” retaining
the nasal palatial in question.
Another contention is the Igbo word isi and the Hebrew for
head which is rosh, Arabic Ras. Ujah refers to the Bible for
his similarity of the word. As a third party, the Hebrew “Rosh”
is just a compounding or blending of two distinct root words
in KWA languages of Yoruba and Ibo, or rather a Hebrew word
factor that yields the phonemes of the words for head in Yoruba
and Ibo. Applying clipping as a language universal “Ro/Sh”
to give “Ori” – Yoruba for head “Ishi”,
Igbo for head. Integrating them into Ro + Sh – RoSh,
(Ori + Ishi -> Orishi sounds like Rosh). Another Hebrew
word in this category is Ru’ach – Spirit which
is upon clipping yields several vocabularies in Yoruba and
Ibo languages. Further details see Bolaji Aremo – Yoruba
and Igbo – 2009.
The next word is Hebrew “bara”, to create, which
Eze has introduced to our advantage. Yes to create is “ike”
in Igbo. In euphemistic etymology, the word blood has been
used as creation both in the bible and the Koran. In several
languages, blood is akin to life, even the word is used as
to create, to mate to copulate especially in animals when
paired. Take the Hebrew word bara, add a prefix vowel “o”
and you obtain “obara” – blood in Igbo.
Apply the clipping mode ba/ra and you get Yoruba word “ba”
to mate and Igbo “ra” to mate or copulate.
The “ba” in Yoruba is “gba” in Igbo
where “b” comes as “gb” as in the
word Ibo and Igbo, Also “gba” is Igbo to copulate
among animals. Another Hebrew word for blood is dam –
Arabic dam also. When the word is clipped as Da/m or D/m because
the letter “a” is an infix vowel , the root letter
“m” is same in Igbo as “mme” –
blood. It is called etymo-scrabbling. In the book “fundamentals
of Islam” by P.J. Stewart, a college fellow at oxford,
he posits that vowel elimination or addition leads to variation
of words and meanings. Changes in the pattern of vowels are
used together with prefixes, infixes and suffixes to indicate
variations of meaning thus the Arabic root for example SLM
gives “Salam - peace, (Hebrew Shalom, Igbo Challum-
yield, Solum- respect or submit), Sallam – he grants
peace, Islam-submission Muslim one who submits.
I wish to suggest to Eze as a scientist that 100% is sometimes
unattainable even in nature. There is always a fraction and
even precision machines are constantly calibrated to maintain
a balance. So it is with panthenic totem in Igbo land. It
differs as the Igbo dialects differentiate. Dr. Ujah’s
efforts are not in vain as Eze may think. There are several
other authors that have equally expressed Ujah’s postulation.
He cannot be crucified for his attempts to do what some linguists
have refused to do. Just recently Professor Catherine Acholonu
came up with evidence about the Jews. Hear her as published
in daily sun of October 6 2008 - Jews inherited Ibo traditions.
“When you find words with the same meaning, 3, 4, 5,
6, 10, 11 times between Igbo language and another language,
it means there are some relationship. In comparative linguistics,
most scholars do not explore the benefits of language
universals in their search for roots to similarities in lexicostatistics.
Languages do not have to agree in syntax, grammar, phonotactics
e.t.c. before they can be seen as similar, otherwise why are
they separate languages.
The phonemes and semantics are strong attributes of word similarities.
According to Dr. Bolaji Aremo, “orthography may differ
due to modus loquendum (mode of speech)”. In Dr. Eze’s
environment, he must have heard a child say “tea and
biye” in request for tea and bread. The child’s
mother understands “biye” to mean bread. Even
in one’s family there can be differentiation in words.
Dr. Ujah’s claims are still subject to further investigation
and Dr. Eze should please help rather than condemn. Quod erat
demonstrandum (QED).
•Mazi Ebuzome.
Scientist, and Multilinguist. 08033489659
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